- StorySlam
- A competitive live storytelling event, typically hosted by The Moth, where audience members tell unscripted personal stories on a theme and are judged by the crowd.
- Grand Slam
- A championship-level Moth storytelling event featuring winners from multiple StorySlam competitions, held before a larger audience.
- Main stage
- A curated, longer-form Moth show featuring pre-selected storytellers, as distinct from the open-mic StorySlam format.
- Sileti (Sylheti)
- A dialect of Bengali spoken primarily in the Sylhet region of Bangladesh and northeast India; the home language of Ofia Begum Ali's family.
- Bail
- Money paid to a court to temporarily release a defendant from custody while awaiting trial, forfeited if the defendant fails to appear.
- Outlier hearing
- A legal proceeding referenced by Ofia Begum Ali in the context of their law internship; likely refers to a bail or pre-trial hearing examining a specific legal issue.
- Patient advocate
- A hospital staff member or independent representative who helps patients understand their rights, navigate the healthcare system, and communicate with their care team.
- Duty of care
- A legal obligation requiring a party (such as a hospital) to adhere to a standard of reasonable care to avoid causing foreseeable harm to another person.
- Juris Doctor (JD)
- A professional doctorate and first professional graduate degree in law in the United States, required to practice law.
- Organza
- A thin, plain-woven, sheer fabric traditionally made from silk, used here to describe Alexis Barton's opening-number pageant jumpsuit.
- Collard greens
- A leafy green vegetable (Brassica oleracea) central to Southern U.S. cuisine, traditionally slow-cooked with smoked meat and seasoning.
- Super Moist (Betty Crocker)
- Betty Crocker's Super Moist is a line of boxed cake mixes widely sold across the U.S.; in the episode it is the secret ingredient behind Amena Brown's grandmother's legendary cakes.
- Green Book era / Jim Crow
- Jim Crow refers to laws enforcing racial segregation in the American South from the 1870s to 1960s; during this period Black travelers prepared their own food since many roadside stops were racially segregated or unsafe.
- Moulin Rouge
- A 2001 Baz Luhrmann film musical featuring a famous cover of 'Lady Marmalade,' which the old farmer in Heather Angell's story sang while working the fields.
- Missive
- A long, often formal or expressive letter or message; used here to describe the lengthy, sarcastic voicemails the old farmer left for Heather Angell.
- Rutabaga
- A root vegetable (Brassica napus) common in Southern U.S. cooking, mentioned by Amena Brown as one of her grandmother's traditional dishes.
- 8-count
- A basic unit of musical phrasing in dance, consisting of eight beats; Alexis Barton admitted she didn't know what an 8-count was before entering her pageant.
- Delusional
- Holding a fixed belief disconnected from reality; used self-deprecatingly by Alexis Barton to describe her ambition to compete for Miss Alabama with no performance experience.